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Using the biology of weeds to leverage weed management. Chuck Mohler Cornell University. Weeds are plants that thrive in disturbed environments. For example, in a farm field Our crops are mostly annual plants - they live for one season
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Using the biology of weeds to leverage weed management • Chuck Mohler • Cornell University
Weeds are plants that thrive in disturbed environments • For example, in a farm field • Our crops are mostly annual plants - they live for one season • We kill off natural vegetation & disturb the soil to make conditions suitable for crops • But this also creates habitats for weeds
Many ways to be a weed • Annuals • Summer annuals • Winter annuals • Perennials • Stationary perennials • Taproots • Fibrousroots • Wandering perennials • Bulbs & tubers • Rhizomes or storage roots
Outline • Two general examples • Managing perennials through exhaustion of roots and rhizomes • Choosing an appropriate tillage regimen for depleting a weed seed bank • A specific example – your choice
Wandering perennials • Spread by thickened storage roots or by rhizomes (underground stems)
Shoot above ground Shoot below ground New rhizomes Old rhizome fragment
Management of perennials • Key is exhaustion of reserves. • Time shoot removal relative to growth stage • Shallow roots & rhizomes – chop & bury, • Deep roots & rhizomes – hit them often • Competitive crops, frequently cultivated crops, short season crops
Seeds of most weeds are tiny – why? • Disturbed environments are risky • Tiny seeds spread the risk over many offspring • Seedlings can be small because in a recently disturbed environment they have little competition. • Seedlings have limited resources
Dzier włochaty (Harpalus rufipes Dej.) w pełnym biegu. Death near the soil surface • Seed predation • Wetting and drying • Freeze-thaw
Plowing vs. minimum tillage? • Small seeded species with short lived seeds plow them under • Most will die before they find their way to surface again • Example: hairy galinsoga • Needs to be in the top ¼” to emerge • So if mixed into 8” of soil, the average return time will be 32 years • But few live longer than 2 or 3 years.
Large seeded species with long lived seeds keep them near the surface • Their mortality will be greater at the surface • And most that are tilled under will come back to bother you later • Example: velvetleaf • Emerges well from the top 2” of soil • So if mixed into 8” of soil, the average return time to the emergence zone is 4 years • 80-90% survival below 4” – 0.85x0.85x0.85x0.85=0.52 so 50+% will make it back into the safe-to-emerge zone before they die • <20% survival near the surface
Species with small, long lived seeds? • Lambsquarters • Wild mustard
Many other examples • Germination cues • Cultivated fallows • Mulches • Stale seedbed • Relative size of crop and weed seeds • Management of crop competition • Plant size distributions • Reduction of weed seed production
“Manage Weeds on Your Farm: a Guide to Ecological Strategies”Mohler and DiTommaso, SAN • Ecology of weeds • Cultural control methods • Physical control methods • Farm case studies • Identification, ecology and management of the 75 worst agricultural weeds in the United States
A specific example • Most farms have many weeds, but only one or two really problem weeds • Often need to focus on those • http://www.css.cornell.edu/weedeco • http://www.organic.cornell.edu/ocs/index.html